Stop Waiting for the Perfect Time to Buy a Home Because It Is Not Coming and Here Is Why
The Waiting Game That Has a Real and Measurable Cost
Are you waiting for mortgage rates to drop? Waiting for prices to fall? Waiting for the recession that will supposedly create the buying opportunity of a lifetime? Taking advice from a neighbor who has never owned a home about when the market will be right?
Here is the honest truth. It is not going to happen the way you are imagining it and every month you spend waiting has a real financial cost that compounds against you.
What Happened to the Buyers Who Waited During COVID
The people who did not buy during the pandemic because prices felt too high or because they were waiting for conditions to normalize missed one of the most significant appreciation events in modern real estate history. The buyers who were ready and acted built substantial equity over the following years. The buyers who waited watched that opportunity close and then found themselves looking at a market where both prices and rates had moved against them.
Every market cycle produces a version of this story. The buyers who act when they are financially ready consistently outperform the buyers who wait for conditions that feel more comfortable.
Why Current Rates Are More Reasonable Than Most People Think
Mortgage rates right now feel elevated to buyers who are comparing them to the historically anomalous pandemic-era lows of 2020 and 2021. But those rates were an extraordinary and unrepeatable product of emergency monetary policy that flooded the economy with cheap money in a way that created bubbles across multiple asset classes simultaneously.
If you look at the actual history of mortgage rates across decades the current environment is not extreme. It is a return toward normal after an abnormal period. Buyers who are waiting for rates to return to 2021 levels are waiting for conditions that required a global pandemic and unprecedented Federal Reserve intervention to produce.
The Only Three Things That Determine When You Should Buy
As Mark Harris explains the question of when to buy a home is not actually about rates or prices or market timing. It comes down to three things and three things only.
Do you have the capital? The down payment, the closing costs, the reserves that lenders require to see. If the answer is yes you have cleared the first hurdle.
Do you have the income? Stable documented income that supports the monthly payment at current rates within the qualification guidelines that lenders apply. If the answer is yes you have cleared the second hurdle.
Do you have the credit? A credit profile that qualifies for the loan programs that fit your situation and your goals. If the answer is yes you have cleared the third hurdle.
When all three of those things are in place it is always the right time to buy. Not because the market is perfect. Because you are ready and readiness is the actual variable that determines outcomes in real estate not market timing.
The Rent Reality That Changes How You Think About Waiting
Every month you are renting you are paying a mortgage. It just belongs to someone else. Your rent payment is covering your landlord's principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and in many cases generating a profit for them on top of that. The money is gone the moment it leaves your account and it builds zero equity for you.
Every mortgage payment does something fundamentally different. A portion reduces your loan balance. Appreciation builds your equity further. The asset is yours and the financial benefits compound over time in your favor rather than your landlord's.
Build Your Mortgage Plan Now
If you want to get specific about what it would actually look like for you to purchase a property the conversation is simple and productive. DM Mark Harris or comment the words mortgage plan and he will walk through where you currently stand on the three key variables and what it would take to get into the property you want.
That conversation costs nothing and produces real and specific information about your path to homeownership. The waiting has a cost. The conversation does not.
Sources
FederalReserve.gov
NAR.realtor
MortgageNewsDaily.com
Investopedia.com
BankRate.com


